I still think Josh Rosen is a good prospect, but Murray is a better one and Kliff Kingsbury can rightfully pin the blame for any slow start on GM Steve Keim's six-year reign of terror prior to Kingsbury's arrival.

Tom Coughlin is a goofy old crank. Although there was no upside in it for him, he had to run his mouth about two of his best players in Jalen Ramsey and Telvin Smith even after already alienating one of his other top assets in Leonard Fournette. For various reasons Coughlin can't make a petty example of Ramsey, but Smith's contract can be moved with relative ease.

No matter how anyone reads into the ridiculous McCarthy vs Rodgers saga, even Rodgers' critics can concede that Green Bay's success depends almost singularly on Rodgers' success. Metcalf would bring nitrous oxide to an offense that's become inexplicably sluggish.

13. Houston Texans (from MIA) – Jawaan Taylor, OT, Florida

Houston trades picks 22 and 55 for a player some consider the top tackle prospect.

This might be too high for Savage, but his prospect profile is objectively impressive. His burning athleticism (4.36 40, 39.5-inch vertical, 126-inch broad jump) makes him an easy projection for where the game is headed.

There's no sound reason to believe Campbell can't develop a good downfield game, but in the meantime we know he's murderously good underneath, where he'd nicely complement the downfield routes of T.Y. Hilton and Devin Funchess.

Tyreek Hill's legal standing is a substantial concern to his availability – perhaps an even greater one than the foot injury history is to Sammy Watkins. Pat Mahomes is the best quarterback, but this offense still needs three strong targets if it's going to be a 5,000-yard, 50-touchdown passing game.